PORT ANGELES — A man who allegedly rampaged through a Gales Addition neighborhood with a logging bulldozer pleaded not guilty Wednesday to nine charges, including first-degree assault with a deadly weapon, in Clallam County Superior Court.

Along with the assault charge, Barry A. Swegle, 51, also pleaded not guilty to four counts of first-degree burglary with a deadly weapon — “to wit, a bulldozer” — and four counts of first-degree malicious mischief.

The burglary and assault charges carry maximum sentences of life in prison without parole. The malicious-mischief charges have maximum 10-year sentences.

Swegle inflicted about 10 minutes of carnage in about one square block of Gales Addition just east of Port Angeles shortly after noon Friday, authorities said. No one was injured.

The filing of charges was done before Superior Court Judge George L. Wood, who set a trial-setting hearing at 9 a.m. Friday.

“I had no idea that these charging documents would be so creative,” Port Angeles defense attorney Karen Unger told Wood.

“This is extremely creative, given what I know about what happened, particularly the burglary counts,” said Unger, who is representing Swegle.

Swegle, who earlier Friday had allegedly threatened neighbor Dan Davis, 74, was involved in a fence-related property-line dispute with Davis, the neighbor said in an earlier interview.

The threat was determined to be a civil, not a criminal, matter, Todd VanSickle, a communications supervisor with the Clallam County Sheriff's Office, said Wednesday.

Swegle told an arresting deputy that he “had a confrontation” earlier Friday, “and he is tired of dealing with him over property issues,” according to the report filed after his arrest Friday.

Further information on the threat was unavailable Wednesday afternoon.

The Sheriff's Office estimated that about $300,000 of property damage was done in the area of North Baker Street when Swegle allegedly knocked down a power pole, ran three times over Davis' 2003 Ford F-250 pickup truck and destroyed three houses, two of them owned by Davis.

County Deputy Prosecuting Attorney John Troberg said Wednesday that the assault charge relates to Swegle's running down Davis, cornering him on Davis' Baker Street property and causing Davis to, according to the arrest report, “quickly jump to the side to avoid being struck by the blade of the bulldozer.”

The first 9-1-1 call about the rampage was received by Peninsula Communications at about 12:18 p.m. Friday, and Swegle was taken into custody by Deputy Nick Turner without incident at 12:28 p.m., according to the arrest report.

“[Davis has] been hassling me for years, nothing against you,” Swegle told Turner during the arrest, according to the report.

Terrorized residents had frantically called 9-1-1 with reports of Swegle wrecking their neighborhood, according to a 9-1-1 recording of the incident obtained by the Peninsula Daily News.